Muscogee Creek traditions include a Horned Serpent and a Tie-Snake, estakwvnayv in the Muscogee Creek language. These are sometimes
Alabama people call the Horned Serpent tcinto såktco or "crawfish snake", which they divide into four
Yuchi people made effigies of the Horned Serpent as recently as 1905. An effigy was fashioned from stuffed deerhide, painted blue, with the antlers painted yellow.
Among Cherokee people, a Horned Serpent is called an uktena. Anthropologist James Mooney, describes the creature:
Other known names
•Sisiutl— Kwakwaka'wakw
•Awanyu—Tewa
•Djodi'kwado'—Iroquois
•Msi-kinepikwa ("great snake")—Shawnee
•Misi-ginebig ("great snake")—Oji-Cree
•Mishi-ginebig ("great snake")—Ojibwe
•Pita-skog ("great snake")—Abenaki
•Sinti lapitta—Choctaw
•Unktehi or Unktehila—Dakota
•Olobit—Natchez
A bronze image at Étang-sur-Arroux and a stone sculpture at Sommerécourt depict
Other deities occasionally accompanied by ram-horned serpents include "Celtic Mars" and "Celtic Mercury". The horned snake, and also conventional snakes,
The description of Unktehi or Unktena is, however, more similar to that of a Lindorm in Northern Europe, especially in Southern Scandinavia, and most of all as described in folklore in Eastern
The cerastes is a creature described in Greek mythology as a snake with either two large ram-like horns or four pairs of smaller horns. Isidore of Seville described it as hunting by burying itself in sand while leaving its horns visible, and attacking creatures that came
In Mesopotamia
In Mesopotamian mythology Ningishzida, is sometimes depicted as a serpent with horns. In other depictions, he is shown as human but is accompanied by bashmu, horned serpents. Ningishzida shares the epithet ushumgal, "great serpent", with